Report
Assessing the Financial Sustainability of Jamaica's HIV Program
| collection.link.95 |
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/2203
| |
| collection.name.95 |
Other Health Study
| |
| dc.contributor.author |
World Bank
| |
| dc.date.accessioned |
2017-05-31T19:34:09Z
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| dc.date.available |
2017-05-31T19:34:09Z
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| dc.date.issued |
2013
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| dc.date.lastModified |
2021-06-14T10:29:05Z
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| dc.description.abstract |
Jamaica has made many notable
achievements in the fight against HIV/AIDS, which include a
robust treatment program and improved HIV prevention
programs that increasingly focus on the key drivers of the
HIV epidemic and which are based on evidence. These
attainments have resulted in a sustained decline in the
estimated incidence of HIV and in a reduction in AIDS
mortality. The national response to HIV/AIDS in Jamaica is
currently financed by the Government as well as by several
external sources, including the World Bank, the Global Fund
to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund) and
the United States government. It is expected, however, that
external financing will cease or be significantly reduced in
the next two years. As a result, a substantial increase in
domestic financing for the national HIV/AIDS response will
be needed. However, public debt levels are high, and the
country is feeling the repercussions of the global financial
crisis, thus the availability of domestic resources is and
will be very tight. Any shortfall in financing whether
domestic, external or both will have serious implications
for the delivery of HIV services. The Government of Jamaica
requested this study so as to inform its future HIV/AIDS
policy response. This study is one input in a series of
actions that the Government will undertake to formulate a
future sustainability plan and investment framework for the
National HIV Program. This study was led and financed by the
World Bank and conducted in collaboration with the
Government of Jamaica and United Nations Programme on
HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). The study aimed to assess the
sustainability of Jamaica's National HIV Program from a
fiscal perspective. Specifically, the purpose of the study
was to: 1) review current spending on HIV/AIDS and the
sources of financing; 2) estimate the fiscal burden of the
national HIV/AIDS response and assess the outlook for
external financing of the HIV program; 3) project how the
epidemic will unfold as well as what the costs would be
under different potential scenarios; and 4) provide
recommendations to inform policy decisions.
| en |
| dc.identifier |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/447451468262808471/Assessing-the-financial-sustainability-of-Jamaicas-HIV-Program
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| dc.identifier.uri |
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26805
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| dc.language |
English
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| dc.language.iso |
en_US
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| dc.publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC
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| dc.rights |
CC BY 3.0 IGO
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| dc.rights.holder |
World Bank
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| dc.rights.uri |
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo
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| dc.subject |
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
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| dc.subject |
ACCESS TO TREATMENT
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| dc.subject |
ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME
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| dc.subject |
ADULT POPULATION
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| dc.subject |
AGE GROUPS
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| dc.subject |
AGED
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| dc.subject |
AIDS COMMITTEE
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| dc.subject |
AIDS DEATHS
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| dc.subject |
AIDS INTERVENTIONS
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| dc.subject |
AIDS MORTALITY
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| dc.subject |
AIDS PROGRAM
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| dc.subject |
AIDS SPENDING
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| dc.subject |
ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY
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| dc.subject |
BEHAVIORAL CHANGE
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| dc.subject |
BEHAVIORAL CHANGES
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| dc.subject |
BEHAVIOURAL CHANGE
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| dc.subject |
BURDEN OF DISEASE
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| dc.subject |
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES
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| dc.subject |
CASUAL SEX
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| dc.subject |
CHILD DEVELOPMENT
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| dc.subject |
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
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| dc.subject |
COMMERCIAL SEX
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| dc.subject |
COMMERCIAL SEX WORKERS
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| dc.subject |
COMMUNICABLE DISEASES
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| dc.subject |
CONDOM
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| dc.subject |
CONDOM USE
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| dc.subject |
DEBT
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| dc.subject |
DEMAND FOR SERVICES
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| dc.subject |
DISSEMINATION
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| dc.subject |
DRUG REGIMEN
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| dc.subject |
DRUG USERS
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| dc.subject |
DRUGS
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| dc.subject |
ECONOMIC GROWTH
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| dc.subject |
EFFECTIVE PREVENTION
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| dc.subject |
EPIDEMIC
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| dc.subject |
EXPENDITURES
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| dc.subject |
EXTERNAL DEBT
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| dc.subject |
FEMALE
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| dc.subject |
FEMALE SEX WORKERS
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| dc.subject |
FEMALES
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| dc.subject |
FEWER PEOPLE
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| dc.subject |
FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS
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| dc.subject |
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH CONSEQUENCES
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH EXPENDITURES
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH FACILITIES
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH FINANCING
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH INSURANCE
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH OUTCOMES
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH SECTOR
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH SERVICES
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| dc.subject |
HEALTH SYSTEM
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| dc.subject |
HIGH-RISK GROUPS
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| dc.subject |
HIV
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| dc.subject |
HIV INFECTION
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| dc.subject |
HIV INFECTIONS
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| dc.subject |
HIV PREVENTION
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| dc.subject |
HIV PREVENTION INTERVENTIONS
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| dc.subject |
HIV TESTING
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| dc.subject |
HIV-POSITIVE PEOPLE
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| dc.subject |
HIV/AIDS
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| dc.subject |
HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS
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| dc.subject |
HUMAN RESOURCES
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| dc.subject |
ILLNESS
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| dc.subject |
IMMUNODEFICIENCY
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| dc.subject |
INCOME
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| dc.subject |
INEQUITIES
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| dc.subject |
INFANT
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| dc.subject |
INFANT DEATHS
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| dc.subject |
INFANT MORTALITY
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| dc.subject |
INFECTIONS AMONG ADULTS
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| dc.subject |
INJURIES
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| dc.subject |
INJURY
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| dc.subject |
INPATIENT CARE
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| dc.subject |
INTERVENTION
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| dc.subject |
LACK OF AWARENESS
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| dc.subject |
LEADING CAUSE OF DEATH
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| dc.subject |
LEGAL STATUS
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| dc.subject |
LIFE EXPECTANCY
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| dc.subject |
LIVING CONDITIONS
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| dc.subject |
MALARIA
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| dc.subject |
MINISTRY OF HEALTH
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| dc.subject |
MOTHER
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| dc.subject |
MOTHER TO CHILD
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| dc.subject |
MOTHER TO CHILD TRANSMISSION
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| dc.subject |
MOTHER-TO-CHILD
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| dc.subject |
MOTHERS
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| dc.subject |
MULTIPLE PARTNERS
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| dc.subject |
NATIONAL AIDS
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| dc.subject |
NEW CASES
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| dc.subject |
NEW INFECTIONS
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| dc.subject |
NUMBER OF AIDS DEATHS
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| dc.subject |
NUMBER OF NEW INFECTIONS
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| dc.subject |
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
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| dc.subject |
NUTRITIONAL DEFICIENCIES
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| dc.subject |
OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS
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| dc.subject |
ORPHAN
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| dc.subject |
ORPHAN SUPPORT
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| dc.subject |
ORPHANS
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| dc.subject |
PALLIATIVE CARE
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| dc.subject |
PATIENT
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| dc.subject |
PATIENTS
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| dc.subject |
PERINATAL CONDITIONS
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| dc.subject |
POLICY DECISIONS
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| dc.subject |
POLICY MAKERS
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| dc.subject |
POLICY RESPONSE
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| dc.subject |
POPULATION GROUPS
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| dc.subject |
POPULATION GROWTH
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| dc.subject |
PREGNANT WOMEN
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| dc.subject |
PREVALENCE
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| dc.subject |
PREVALENCE RATE
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| dc.subject |
PREVALENCE RATES
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| dc.subject |
PREVENTION ACTIVITIES
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| dc.subject |
PREVENTION EFFORTS
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| dc.subject |
PREVENTION OF MOTHER-TO-CHILD TRANSMISSION
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| dc.subject |
PROBABILITY
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| dc.subject |
PROGRESS
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| dc.subject |
PUBLIC HEALTH
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| dc.subject |
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES
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| dc.subject |
PUBLIC HEALTH SPENDING
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| dc.subject |
PUBLIC SERVICES
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| dc.subject |
RATE OF CONDOM USE
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| dc.subject |
RATE OF TRANSMISSION
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| dc.subject |
RESOURCE NEEDS
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| dc.subject |
RESPECT
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| dc.subject |
RISK POPULATIONS
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| dc.subject |
SEX WITH MEN
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| dc.subject |
SEX WORKER
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| dc.subject |
SEXUAL ACTIVITY
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| dc.subject |
SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
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| dc.subject |
SEXUAL INTERCOURSE
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| dc.subject |
SEXUAL RISK
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| dc.subject |
SEXUAL RISK BEHAVIOR
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| dc.subject |
SEXUALLY ACTIVE
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| dc.subject |
SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTION
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| dc.subject |
SOCIAL BARRIERS
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| dc.subject |
SOCIAL SECURITY
| |
| dc.subject |
SOCIAL SERVICES
| |
| dc.subject |
SOCIAL SUPPORT
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| dc.subject |
SURVIVAL RATES
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| dc.subject |
THERAPY
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| dc.subject |
TRANSMISSION
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| dc.subject |
TREATMENT ACCESS
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| dc.subject |
TUBERCULOSIS
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| dc.subject |
UNAIDS
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| dc.subject |
UNDER-FIVE MORTALITY
| |
| dc.subject |
UNITED NATIONS POPULATION DIVISION
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| dc.subject |
USER FEES
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| dc.subject |
VULNERABLE CHILDREN
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| dc.subject |
WORKING-AGE POPULATION
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| dc.subject |
YOUNG ADULTS
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| dc.subject |
YOUNG PEOPLE
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| dc.title |
Assessing the Financial Sustainability of Jamaica's HIV Program
| en |
| dc.type |
Report
| en |
| okr.date.disclosure |
2013
| |
| okr.doctype |
Economic & Sector Work
| |
| okr.doctype |
Economic & Sector Work :: Other Health Study
| |
| okr.docurl |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/447451468262808471/Assessing-the-financial-sustainability-of-Jamaicas-HIV-Program
| |
| okr.googlescholar.linkpresent |
yes
| |
| okr.identifier.externaldocumentum |
090224b087853718_2_0
| |
| okr.identifier.internaldocumentum |
17120450
| |
| okr.identifier.report |
74547
| |
| okr.imported |
true
| |
| okr.language.supported |
en
| |
| okr.pdfurl |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/447451468262808471/pdf/NonAsciiFileName0.pdf
| en |
| okr.region.administrative |
Latin America & Caribbean
| |
| okr.region.country |
Jamaica
| |
| okr.sector |
Health and other social services :: Health
| |
| okr.theme |
Human development :: HIV/AIDS
| |
| okr.topic |
Gender :: Gender and Health
| |
| okr.topic |
Health, Nutrition and Population :: Disease Control & Prevention
| |
| okr.topic |
Health, Nutrition and Population :: HIV AIDS
| |
| okr.topic |
Health, Nutrition and Population :: Health Systems Development & Reform
| |
| okr.topic |
Health, Nutrition and Population :: Health Economics & Finance
|







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